BENNY
HIMM: A FALSE PROPHET
If you click your mouse on the underined
words, you will get more information,
"For there are many unruly and vain talkers and deceivers whose
mouths must be stopped, who subvert whole houses, teaching things which they
ought not, for filthy lucre's sake." —Titus
Notwithstanding that Benny Hinn is
about the most sought after false prophet and teacher in today’s religious
world, he falsely predicted that all the homosexuals in America would die by
fire in the late 1990's. Benny Hinn has also stated that there are mine beings within the Godhead. Three beings (Tritheism) each have their own trinity
of beings within each of them.
Benny Hinn teaches word-faith doctrine. Benny
Hinn stated on the Trinity Broadcast
Network (TBN) that after his crusade in South America in 2002, that he was
certain that he would return to America with video footage of Jesus appearing
on stage during his crusades because Jesus had told him this was going to
happen. Needless to say, no person ever
saw the preferred video. Hinn also stated that very soon people would no
longer need to take their deceased loved ones to the morgue and later bury
them. Instead, their dead bodies should be placed in front of the television
during the airing of his sermons and they would then rise from the dead. I
don't have enough time in my lifetime to list all of the falseness of this
phony prophet’s teachings spouted by him during his ministry.
Religious false prophets are becoming more prominent in
today’s age of tolerance and rebellion against the God they believed in when
they were young. This culture is eager yo accept an easy religion – one that
requires no effort and offers no consequences. This generation more than any
other wants to live the way they prefer without boundaries or guidance to lead
them on the right paths of decency and consideration for all who deserve it.
Unfortunately, there are plenty of false teachers and
preachers who are eager to give the people what they want to hear and usually, the
gullible fools who swallow that crap that oozes out of the mouths of the false prophets, end up
giving large sums of money to these
false prophets. From feel-good prosperity preachers, to teachers who deny the
literal existence of eternity, to religious leaders of the popular
earn-your-way-to-heaven efforts; these false prophets are everywhere.
In 2 Timothy 4: 3-4, "For the time is coming when people will not endure sound
teaching, but having itching ears they will accumulate for themselves teachers
to suit their own passions, and will turn away from listening to the truth and
wander off into myths."
False teachers will lead their congregation to believe that
God wants them to be happy and wealthy. Some teachers even take it further, and
declare that if a Christian isn’t financially rich, or isn’t emotionally and
relationally prosperous, they just “aren’t praying hard enough” or “need to
increase their faith”. This type of teaching is dangerous and inaccurate.
The Bible clearly states otherwise about the
expectations of what this world has to offer.
In Mark 10:25, "It is
easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich person to
enter the kingdom of God."
You can be sure that these false prophets never have that
quotation uttering from their mouths.
False teachers don’t like to offend anyone, so they gloss
over sin in order to keep their fans happy. They often do this by stating a
particular controversial so-called sin such as homosexuality, and fornication,
adultery, gluttony or greed isn’t a sin and for this reason, there’s no need to
worry or change heir ways. It doesn’t surprise me at all that these happy fools who
go to these false prophet’s meetings willingly accept such teachings by their
false prophets.
False prophets are content to preach that they believe
there’s no need for repentance because Jesus died for everyone. They teach that
we should just be grateful for his sacrifice
and that’s all there is to it.
Tell that to a defendant about to be
sentenced to a long term of imprisonment.
Imagine him saying the following when asked by the judge if he has
anything to say before the sentence is passed upon him.
“Your honour. I have no repentance
to offer to the parents in this court room for me killing their children
because Jesus died for me like he died for every other sinner like me.”
That fool would have then convinced
his judge to raise the number of years on his sentence to natural life in
prison.
In a stunning reversal, this controversial
televangelist and faith healer, Benny Hinn announced to his followers that he
will no longer preach the “prosperity gospel,” a teaching that says believers
will be rewarded with health and wealth as long as they give monetary offerings
to their churches and pastors.
He said in a live video posted to his
Facebook page, “I’m sorry to say that
prosperity has gone a little crazy and I’m correcting my own theology and you
need to all know it because when I read the Bible now, I don’t see the Bible in
the same eyes I saw 20 years ago. I think it’s an offense to the Lord, it’s an
offense to say give $1,000. I think it’s an offense to the Holy Spirit to place
a price on the Gospel. I’m done with it. I will never again ask you to give
$1,000 or whatever amount, because I think the Holy Ghost is just fed up with
it.”
Hinn’s renouncement of his former teachings was received with
overwhelming approval from his audience, but according to writer and podcaster
Karen Alea, Hinn should not be believed.
In a guest post for the Friendly Atheist, Alea points out that
Hinn’s website still asks donors to give up to
$1,000 a month to Hinn’s ministry. Additionally, just two
days after Hinn’s video aired, he asked his followers
to send him seed money for “debt elimination.” As Alea pointed out, the video
was quickly deleted, but someone changed the video and put together a mashup
that included Hinn’s requests for money. This man is a hypocrite.
Proponents of the prosperity gospel often use the term “seed
money” as a way to market their requests. Just as seed money is used by
investors to help launch companies or projects in exchange for a cut on the
ensuing profits, believers can put forward seed donations in exchange for
monetary growth as a reward from God.
“When’s he going to “rebuke” himself?”
Alea wrote. “Hinn hasn’t given up the prosperity gospel. He just found a better
marketing strategy for it.”
In my opinion and probably in the
opinions of many, Christianity is one of the biggest
scams in the United States. Of course, there are some exceptions. Benny Hinn is
considered by many as being evil. He impoverishes people on purpose. He, and
those scumbags like him, should all be ignored.
Do you really believe that if Jesus
promised to heal his followers if they
had to give him money, his legacy wold still have the respect it continues to deserve?
Despite
the fact that Hinn is a super star on TBN – the trinity broadcast network, his
kind define what’s wrong with Christian television ministries. If there really is
a hell, there is a special spot set aside and prepared for this greedy
hypocrite.
Hinn
and other religious type scumbags, are scamming people by telling them that
they will make back the money they send at ten times over. That's a scam. It is
even worse than a pyramid scheme, or chain letters.
Many
years ago in the last century, there was a preacher who said that if we sent
him ten dollars, he would send us a small crucifix that would bring us good
luck. I wrote him a letter and said I was very poor and didn’t have the money
to give him. I asked him if he could still give me one of his small crucifixs.
Believe it or not, he actually sent me a small crucifix and wished me well. Now
there was an honest and decent preacher of the Gospel. I don’t know if the
crucifix brought me good luck but after that time in my life. I had and still
have a good life. Of course, we actually have to make our good luck. I wrote
him back and thanked him for his consideration.
Hinn
and his ilk are parasites. The 'blab and grab' seed money scam postulates into
believing that god wants them to be rich.
I realize that these grifters will never
give anyone their cash because the con does not work that way. Or should I say,
it works in reverse.
In March 1993 Inside Edition reported on Hinn's
$685,000 ($25 nillion in 2019) Orlando
home and Mercedes-Benz, despite Hinn
having previously claimed he was living in a "modest lifestyle".
An employee of Inside Edition also faked a
healing from cerebral
palsy which was shown on Hinn's regular broadcast. A
controversial aspect of Hinn's ministry is his teaching on, and demonstration
of, a phenomenon he dubs "The Anointing"—the power
purportedly given by God and transmitted through Hinn to carry out supernatural
acts. At his Miracle Crusades, he has allegedly healed attendees of
blindness, deafness, cancer, AIDS, and
severe physical injuries. However, investigative reports by the Los Angeles Times, NBC's Dateline, the CBC's The Fifth Estate,
and the Nine Network's 60
Minutes have called these claims into serious doubt.
Hey. If this phony preacher can get money from fools who
believe and trust him, why don’t I offer you help with your serious illnesses?
If you send me ten dollars, I will ask God to heal you. What have you got to lose other than your ten
dollars? Come on now. God is waiting for
my call to him to heal you from your inoperable brain cancer.
Hinn has also caused controversy for theological remarks and
claims he has made during TV appearances. In 1999, Hinn appeared on the Trinity Broadcasting Network, claiming that God
had given him a vision predicting the resurrection of thousands of dead people
after watching the network—laying out a scenario of people placing their dead
loved ones' hands on TV screens tuned into the station—and suggesting that TBN
would be "an extension of Heaven to Earth." Did the Owners of TBN really permit that
garbage to be shown on their TV? Of course after all. Hinn was paying them money for his broadcasts.
In April 2001, HBO aired a
documentary entitled A Question of Miracles that focused on
Hinn and a well-documented fellow Word-of-Faith German minister based in
Africa, Reinhard
Bonnke. Both Hinn and Bonnke offered full access to their
events to the documentary crew, and the documentary team followed seven cases
of "miracle healings" from Hinn's crusade over the next year. The
film's director, Antony Thomas, told CNN's Kyra Phillips that they did
not find any cases where people were actually healed by Hinn. Thomas said in
a New York Times interview
that "If I had seen miracles [from Hinn's ministry], I would have been
happy to trumpet it but in retrospect, I think they do more damage to
Christianity than the most committed atheists.
In November 2004, the CBC
Television show The Fifth Estate did
a special titled "Do You Believe in Miracles" on the apparent
transgressions committed by Benny Hinn's ministry.
With the aid of hidden cameras and crusade witnesses, the
producers of the show demonstrated Hinn's apparent misappropriation of funds,
his fabrication of the truth, and the way in which his staff chose crusade
audience members to come on stage to proclaim their miracle healings. In
particular, the investigation highlighted the fact that the most desperate
miracle seekers who attend a Hinn crusade—the quadriplegics, the brain-damaged,
virtually anyone with a visibly obvious physical condition—are never allowed up
on stage and those who attempt to get in the line of possible healings are
intercepted and directed to return to their seats. Incidentally, that program
was rebroadcasted in January 2o20. I saw it and that is why I decided to write
this article for you.
At one Canadian service, hidden cameras showed a mother who
was carrying her muscular dystrophy-afflicted daughter,
Grace, being stopped by two screeners when they attempted to get into the line
for a possible blessing from Hinn. The screeners asked the mother if Grace had
been healed, and when the mother replied in the negative, they were told to
return to their seats. The pair had got
out of line, but Grace, wanting Pastor Benny to pray for [her. She asked her mother to support her as she
tried to walk as a show of "her faith in action," according to the
mother. After several unsuccessful attempts at walking, the pair left the arena
in tears, both mother and daughter visibly upset at being turned aside and
crying as they explained to the undercover reporters that all Grace had wanted
was for Hinn to pray for her, but the staffers rushed them out of the line when
they found out Grace had not been healed.
A week later at a service in Toronto, Baptist evangelist
Justin Peters, who wrote his Masters in Divinity thesis on Benny Hinn and
has attended numerous Hinn crusades since 2000 as part of his research for his
thesis and for a seminar he developed about the Word of Faith movement entitled A Call for Discernment also
demonstrated to the hidden cameras that "people who look like
me"—Peters has cerebral
palsy, walks with arm-crutches, and is obviously and visibly
disabled—" they are never allowed on stage since it is always somebody who has some disability or
disease that cannot be readily seen. Like Grace and her mother, Peters was
quickly intercepted as he came out of the wheelchair section (there is one at
every crusade, situated at the back of the audience, far away from the stage,
and never fiIn requestedlmed for Hinn's TV show) in an attempt to join the line
of those waiting to go onstage, and was told to take a seat instead.
In 2007, United States Senator Chuck
Grassley announced an
investigation of Hinn's ministry by the United States Senate Committee on Finance. In a letter to
BHM, Grassley asked for the ministry to divulge financial information to
the Senate Committee on Finance to determine if Hinn made any personal profit
from financial donations, and requested that Hinn's ministry make the
information available.
The investigation also scrutinized five other televangelists
such as Paula White, Kenneth
Copeland, Eddie L. Long, Joyce Meyer, and Creflo Dollar. In December
2007, Hinn said he would not respond to the inquiry until 2008. (sounds
like Trump) The ministry subsequently responded to the inquiry, and Grassley
said that "...Benny Hinn has engaged in open and honest dialogue with
committee staff. They have not only provided responses to every question but,
in the spirit of true cooperation, also have provided information over and
above what was asked of him.
The investigation
concluded in 2011 with no penalties or findings of wrongdoing. The final report
raised questions about personal use of church-owned luxury goods and a lack of
financial oversight on the ministries' boards, which are often populated with
family and friends of the televangelist. Hinn's group reported to the committee
that it complied with tax regulations and had made changes in compensation and
governance procedures.
Hinn married
Suzanne Harthern on the 4th of August 1979. The couple have four
children. Suzanne filed divorce papers in California's Orange County Superior Court on the 1st of February 2010, citing "irreconcilable
differences. In July 2010, both Hinn and fellow televangelist Paula White
denied allegations in the National
Enquirer that the two were engaged in an affair Hinn
was sued in February 2011 by the Christian publishing house Strang
Communications, which claimed that a relationship with White did occur and that
Hinn had violated the morality clause of his contract with the company.
In May 2012, Hinn
announced that he and Suzanne had begun reconciliation during the Christmas
season of 2011, stating
that the split had been caused by her addiction to prescription drugs and
antidepressants and citing his busy schedule and lack of time for his wife and
children. In October 2012, Hinn announced that he and Suzanne would
remarry. Benny and Suzanne remarried on 3 March 2013, at the Holy Land Experience theme park, in a
traditional ceremony lasting over two hours and attended by approximately 1,000
well-wishers, including many visiting Christian leaders. Jack Hayford referred
to the remarriage as "a miracle of God's grace."
Well, I have said enough about this
phony hypocritical so-called Christian preacher.
As a final statement, remember that
God is waiting for my call. It will only
cost you ten dollars to be cured of your inoperable illness.
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